As usual with these settlements, you’ll read a lot online about how Apple will pay you $25 per device. That’s already actually pretty low if you bought a new iPhone to replace an existing iPhone that mysteriously stopped performing well. But you’re not likely to even get that $25.
Read the fine print, per Bloomberg Law:
The maximum settlement is $500 million. $93 million will go to attorneys’ fees—that’s who’s making the real money here, as usual—and “up to $1.5 million” for expenses. People actually named in the lawsuit will get between $1500 and $3500. Everyone else will be competing for whatever’s leftover.
If many people hear about this lawsuit and file a claim online—it’ll be big news and easy to do—then there won’t be very much cash left. It’ll be divided amongst everyone who files a claim, so you could just get a few bucks.
After all, that’s what happened with the Equifax breach. Everyone heard about how they were entitled to claim $125 from a settlement after the Equifax credit reporting agency leaked the details on hundreds of millions of Americans.
Those Equifax settlement checks haven’t gone out yet, but many people heard about it and claimed the cash. The FTC warned that “the public response to the settlement has been overwhelming” and that “each person who takes the money option will wind up only getting a small amount of money.” The FTC advised people to choose free credit monitoring to help protect themselves from identity thieves instead of the small amount of cash.
So sure, you’ll soon be able to claim some cash if you purchased an iPhone 6, 6 Plus, 6s Plus, 7, 7 Plus, or SE device. But we’d be shocked if you actually get the promised $25 per device. That’s not how these settlements work.
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